MIT Department of Electrical Engineering & Computer Science

E E C S

EECS Fall 1999 Catalogue Supplement

6.892 Computer Networks (H)

MW 11-12:30, 4-153
Prof. Hari Balakrishnan, NE43-510, x8713
Prerequisite: 6.033 or equivalent and familiarity with network protocols
3-0-9

The goals of this subject are:

1.To understand the state-of-the-art in network protocols, architectures and applications.
2.To understand how networking research is done.
3.To investigate novel ideas in the area via semester-long research projects.

The past few years have seen a remarkable growth in the global networking infrastructure. The Internet has grown from a research curiosity to something we all take for granted, beginning to become as essential as the ubiquitous telephone and utility networks. It has been able to withstand rapid growth fairly well and its protocols have been robust enough to accomodate applications that were unforeseen by the original Internet designers, such as the amazingly successful World Wide Web.

How does this global network infrastructure work and what are the design principles on which it is based? How do we make it work better in today's world? How do we ensure that it will work well in the future in the face of rapidly growing scale, heterogeneous network and device technologies, and diverse applications? How should Internet applications be designed to obtain the best possible performance both for themselves and for others using the infrastructure?

These are some issues that we will grapple with in this course. The emphasis will be on how we can networked systems, protocols, and applications should be designed, implemented, analyzed, and evaluated, in the face of the above challenges.


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Editor: Mibsy Brooks  | Created: Jun 31, 1998  | Modified: Jun 21, 1999
Related page: EECS Fall 1999 Catalogue Supplement
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